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Query: EC:1.7.1.2 (nitrate reductase)
3,861 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)-nitrate reductase from Neurospora crassa was purified and found to be stimulated by certain amino acids, citrate, and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA). Stimulation by citrate and the amino acids was dependent upon the prior removal of EDTA from the enzyme preparations, since low quantities of EDTA resulted in maximal stimulation. Removal of EDTA from enzyme preparations by dialysis against Chelex-containing buffer resulted in a loss of nitrate reductase activity. Addition of alanine, arginine, glycine, glutamine, glutamate, histidine, tryptophan, and citrate restored and stimulated nitrate reductase activity from 29- to 46-fold. The amino acids tested altered the Km of NADPH-nitrate reductase for NADPH but did not significantly change that for nitrate. The Km of nitrate reductase for NADPH increased with increasing concentrations of histidine but decreased with increasing concentrations of glutamine. Amino acid modulation of NADPH-nitrate reductase activity is discussed in relation to the conservation of energy (NADPH) by Neurospora when nitrate is the nitrogen source.
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PMID:Regulation of the Neurospora crassa assimilatory nitrate reductase. 1 23

In two out of three pleiotropic mutants of Rhizobium meliloti, defective in nitrate reductase induced by amino acid utilization in vegetative bacteria and in symbiotic nitrogen fixation, nitrogenase activity could be restored completely by purines and partially by the amino acids L-glutamate, L-aspartate, L-glutamine, and L-asparagine. The compounds restoring effectiveness in nitrogen fixation did not restore nitrate reductase activity in vegetative bacteria. The restoration of effectiveness supports our earlier conclusion that the mutation is not in the structural gene for a suggested common subunit of nitrogenase and nitrate reductase.
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PMID:Phenotypic reversion of nitrogenase in pleiotropic mutants of Rhizobium meliloti. 45 48

Active transport of amino acids by membrane vesicles from Escherichia coli, grown anaerobically on glucose in the presence of nitrate, can be energized under anaerobic conditions by electron transfer in the nitrate respiration system with formate as electron donor and nitrate as acceptor. A high rate of amino acid transport is also obtained under anaerobic conditions by electron transfer from formate to the nitrate analogue chlorate or to the membrane-impermeable electron acceptor ferricyanide. Electron transfer from formate to nitrate results in the generation of an electrical potential as is indicated by the uptake of the lipophilic cation triphenylmethylphosphonium. Ferricyanide accpets electrons from at least two sites of the nitrate respiration system. One of these sites appears to be nitrate reductase, because cytochrome b, reduced by formate, is completely reoxidized by ferricyanide and glutamate transport energized by formate plus ferricyanide and formate plus nitrate are affected by the same electron transfer inhibitors. A second site of electron transfer to ferricyanide appears to be located prior to nitrate reductase in the nitrate respiration system, since formate is oxidized at a higher rate in the presence of ferricyanide than with nitrate while formate/ferricyanide energizes transport of amino acids at a lower rate than formate/nitrate. Moreover, electron transfer inhibitors block electron transfer from formate to nitrate to a significantly higher extent than from formate to ferricyanide. The effects of irradiation of the membrane vesicles with near ultra-violet light suggest that quinones play an essential role in the electron transfer from formate to nitrate or ferricyanide. Irradiation blocks completely formate-dependent nitrate and ferricyanide reduction and active transport driven by formate/nitrate and formate/ferricyanide, but has hardly any effect on the activity of formate dehydrogenase and on ascorbate/phenazine methosulphate/oxygen-driven transport. Similar effects of ferricyanide have been observed in membrane vesicles from E. coli, grown anaerobically in the presence of fumarate. In these membrane vesicles a high rate of lactose and triphenylmethylphosphonium uptake under anaerobic conditions is obtained by electron transfer from glycerol 1-phosphate to fumarate and also to ferricyanide and evidence has been presented for the involvement of cytochromes in these electron transfers.
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PMID:Active transport by membrane vesicles from anaerobically grown Escherichia coli energized by electron transfer to ferricyanide and chlorate. 79 48

The effects of different culture conditions on nitrate reductase activity and nitrate reductase protein from Monoraphidium braunii have been studied, using two different immunological techniques, rocket immunoelectrophoresis and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, to determine nitrate reductase protein. The nitrogen sources ammonium and glutamine repressed nitrate reductase synthesis, while nitrite, alanine, and glutamate acted as derepressors. There was a four- to eightfold increase of nitrate reductase activity and a twofold increase of nitrate reductase protein under conditions of nitrogen starvation versus growth on nitrate. Nitrate reductase synthesis was repressed in darkness. However, when Monoraphidium was grown under heterotrophic conditions with glucose as the carbon and energy source, the synthesis of nitrate reductase was maintained. With ammonium or darkness, changes in nitrate reductase activity correlated fairly well with changes in nitrate reductase protein, indicating that in both cases loss of activity was due to repression and not to inactivation of the enzyme. Experiments using methionine sulfoximine, to inhibit ammonium assimilation, showed that ammonium per se and not a product of its metabolism was the corepressor of the enzyme. The appearance of nitrate reductase activity after transferring the cells to induction media was prevented by cycloheximide and by 6-methylpurine, although in this latter case the effect was observed only in cells preincubated with the inhibitor for 1 h before the induction period.
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PMID:Immunological approach to the regulation of nitrate reductase in Monoraphidium braunii. 291 54

l-Glutamate uptake, thiourea uptake, and methylammonium uptake and the intracellular ammonium concentration were measured in wild-type and mutant cells of Aspergillus nidulans held in various concentrations of ammonium and urea. The levels of l-glutamate uptake, thiourea uptake, nitrate reductase, and hypoxanthine dehydrogenase activity are determined by the extracellular ammonium concentration. The level of methylammonium uptake is determined by the intracellular ammonium concentration. The uptake and enzyme characteristics of the ammonium-derepressed mutants, meaA8, meaB6, DER3, amrA1, xprD1, and gdhA1, are described. The gdhA mutants lack normal nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-glutamate dehydrogenase (NADP-GDH) activity and are derepressed with respect to both external and internal ammonium. The other mutant classes are derepressed only with respect to external ammonium. The mutants meaA8, DER3, amrA1, and xprD1 have low levels of one or more of the l-glutamate, thiourea, and methylammonium uptake systems. A model for ammonium regulation in A. nidulans is put forward which suggests: (i) NADP-GDH located in the cell membrane complexes with extracellular ammonium. This first regulatory complex determines the level of l-glutamate uptake, thiourea uptake, nitrate reductase, and xanthine dehydrogenase by repression or inhibition, or both. (ii) NADP-GDH also complexes with intracellular ammonium. This second and different form of regulatory complex determines the level of methylammonium uptake by repression or inhibition, or both.
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PMID:Ammonium regulation in Aspergillus nidulans. 414 65

Wild-type cells of Aspergillus nidulans synthesize a transport system which appears to be specific for l-glutamate and l-aspartate. The system is energy dependent and concentrates l-glutamate at least 60-fold. In cells grown in the presence of 1% sucrose, l-glutamate uptake activity is regulated by ammonium control, although it is not certain whether this is at the level of transcription or translation. Mutants that are insensitive to ammonium control of certain other unrelated systems, e.g., nitrate reductase, are also insensitive, except in the case of one class of ammonium-insensitive mutants, to ammonium control of l-glutamate transport. The activity of this transport system is specifically impaired in a mutant at the aauA locus. This mutation results in poor growth with l-glutamate or l-aspartate as the sole carbon or nitrogen source and is recessive in the heterozygous diploid aauA1/+ for transport and growth characteristics. The likelihood that the mutation results in a defect of the transport mechanism rather than abnormal ammonium control is discussed.
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PMID:Regulatory aspects of L-glutamate transport in Aspergillus nidulans. 460 30

During growth of Aspergillus nidulans in medium containing ammonium the specific activities of most enzymes involved in catabolism of nitrogen sources are low (ammonium repression). The gdhA10 lesion, which results in loss of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-linked glutamate dehydrogenase activity, has been shown to lead to partial relief of ammonium repression of three amidase enzymes as well as histidase. The areA102 lesion led to altered levels of these enzymes but did not greatly affect ammonium repression. The double mutant areA102,gdhA10 was almost completely insensitive to ammonium repression of two of the amidase enzymes and histidase. This suggests that an interaction between the areA and gdhA genes in determining responses to ammonium occurs. Growth of mycelium in medium containing l-glutamate has been found to result in lowered levels of all four enzymes, and this occurs in strains insensitive to ammonium repression. Very strong repression in all strains occurred during growth in medium containing l-glutamine. Relief of these repressive effects of glutamate and glutamine was blocked by cycloheximide. Glutamate and glutamine had similar effects on the production of extracellular protease activity, and growth on glutamine led to low levels of urate oxidase. In contrast to the above enzymes, nitrate reductase was insensitive to the effects of glutamine and glutamate, even though this enzyme is very sensitive to ammonium repression. Although other possibilities exist, it is suggested that there may be mechanisms of general control of nitrogen-catabolic enzymes other than ammonium repression.
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PMID:Effects of ammonium, L-glutamate, and L-glutamine on nitrogen catabolism in Aspergillus nidulans. 461 4

Cultures of Clostridium KDHS2 reduced 15NO3- to 15NH4+ with a concurrent increase in molar growth yield of 15.7% compared with fermentatively grown bacteria. The bacteria exhibited a Ks (NO3-) of 0.5 mM and reduced NO3- maximally at a rate of 0.1 mumol h(-1) mg dry wt)-1. A partially purified nitrate reductase was obtained which had a Km (NO3-) of 0.15 mM. The reduction of 13NO3- to 13NH4+ by resting bacteria was not inhibited by NH4+, glutamate, glutamine, methionine sulphoximine or azaserine. Glutamine synthetase affected neither the synthesis nor the activity of the NO3(-)-reducing enzymes. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that NO3- reduction to NH4+ in this Clostridium sp. is dissimilative. SO32-, but not SO42-, inhibited the reaction, apparently at the level of NO2- reduction.
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PMID:The reduction of nitrate to ammonium by a Clostridium sp. isolated from soil. 610 43

Growth of Neurospora crassa on media containing NH4+ leads to the repression of a variety of permeases and alternative pathways which would generate NH4+, so called "ammonium repression." The mutant am2 which lacks NADP-GDH is not subject to ammonium repression of nitrate reductase or urea permease, but like the wild type has repressed levels of these systems when grown in the presence of proline, glutamate or glutamine. The glutamine synthetase (GS) mutant gln-1a has derepressed levels of the aforementioned systems unless grown with glutamine. The oligomeric state of GS depends upon the nitrogen sufficiency of the cell, a tetrameric form predominates under conditions of nitrogen limitation and an octameric form under conditions of nitrogen sufficiency. We have found that the tetrameric form GS predominates in the mutants am2 and gln-1a when they are ammonium derepressed. Th mechanism of NH4+ repression in N. crassa is thought to entail a cessation of positive gene action by the product of the nit-2 regulatory gene. We propose that under conditions of NH4+ sufficiency, and hence glutamine sufficiency, the octameric form of GS represses nit-2 gene expression and thereby achieves ammonium repression.
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PMID:The role fo glutamine synthetase and glutamine metabolism in nitrogen metabolite repression, a regulatory phenomenon in the lower eukaryote Neurospora crassa. 610 28

In Neurospora crassa, synthesis of the enzymes of nitrate assimilation, nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase, was repressed by the presence of ammonium, glutamate, or glutamine. This phenomenon was a manifestation of the regulatory process termed nitrogen metabolite repression whereby alternative pathways of nitrogen acquisition are not expressed in cells enjoying nitrogen sufficiency. However, the glutamine synthetase mutant gln-1b had derepressed levels of the nitrate assimilation enzymes. The inability of glutamine to achieve nitrogen metabolite repression in this mutant militated against its potential role as the direct effector of this regulation.
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PMID:Effect of the gln-1b mutation on nitrogen metabolite repression in Neurospora crassa. 610 13


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